Title: Biology of Plants
1Biology of Plants
What is botany? Botany The study of plants
and plant-like organisms. Botany without
Borders Link 10 min video
2Botanical organisms what dothey have in
common?
- Do they all conduct photosynthesis?
- All photosynthetic organisms are considered
- botanical organisms
- but,
- not all botanical organisms are photosynthetic.
3Botanical organismsDo they all have cell walls?
- All cell-walled eukaryotes are botanical
- organisms
- but,
- some botanical organisms lack cell walls.
4Botanical organisms
- Do they lack motility?
- Plants and fungi are non-motile
- but,
- slime molds are motile as are some algae and
- cyanobacteria.
5Botanical organisms
- What are not botanical organisms?
- animals heterotrophic protists
6Systematics
- Organisms are grouped into broader taxonomic
categories arranged in Hiearchy Kingdom was the
most inclusive unit Now we also have Domains - Current Hierarchal order of Organisms
- D K P C O F G S
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8Forms of blue-green algae
- extant species occur as single cells
- (unicellular) and colonial forms
9Colonial formsof blue green algae
- each cell is independent
- specialization largely restricted to two
- cell types heterocysts and akinetes
- no true multicellular forms
akinetes
heterocysts
10Chapter 12
- Systematics The Science of Biological Diversity
11Evolution
- Charles Darwin
- Over 30 million different kinds of species
From simple organisms to more complex
12Nomenclature
- Common names
- Scientific barrier
- Scientific name- a two word latin name that
identifies it precisely (identity card) - Today rules and rationale
- Characteristics used for classifying
- Overview of major groups
- Hypothetical mechanism of eukaryotic evolution
13- What is the binomial system of nomenclature?
Prunus persica
14Systematics
- The scientific study of biological diversity
- its evolutionary History
- Goal-
15- Genera grouped into Families (- aceae)
- Families into Orders (-ales)
- Orders into Classes
- Classes into Phylum
- (Plants) groups of classes into Divisions now
known as Phylum - Phylum into Kingdoms
16- The higher the category, the more inclusive it is
- Members of a kingdom share general characters
members of a species share quite specific
characters
17- Category- the level at which it is ranked
- i.e. genus and species are categories
- Taxon- taxonomic group at any level
- i.e. Prunus and Prunus persica are taxa within
those categories
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20Taxonomy
- The identifying, naming and classifying of
species - 18th century Swedish Naturalist Carl Linnaeus
- Polynomial- descriptive phrases
- Nepeta floribus interrupte spicatus pedunculatis
- Binomial- two term system a single word combined
with the genus - Nepeta cataria ( cat associated)
- International code of Botanical Nomenclature
21Carl Linnaeus 18th Century Naturalist
22The Species Name consist of the Genus name plus
the specific Epithet
- Species name- two parts
- First part- genus (generic name)
- Second part- specific epithet
- Catnip- Nepeta and cataria
- Generic name is used to refer to entire group of
species
23Species 1 Of violet genus Viola papilionaceae
24Viola tricolor
25Viola hortensis over 500 species of violas
26Specific epithet
- Artemisia biennis- a kind of wormwood tarragon,
sage brush
27- Lactuca biennis- a species of wild lettuce
28- Oenothera biennis-
- O. biennis
- O. biennis
29Type specimen- each species Housed in a
herbarium Podandrogyne formosa
30Subspecies names may consist three parts
- Prunus persica var. persica Peach
- Prunus persica var. nectarina Nectarine
31Organisms are grouped into broader Taxonomic
Categories
- Five Kingdoms
- Monera- bacteria (prokaryotes)
- The other four are Eukaryotes
- Protista
- Animal
- Fungi
- Plant
32Phylogenetic trees The History of
Creation German Naturalist Ernst Haeckel 1866
33Artificial Taxa
- Relationhips are unknown or uncertain
- Widely accepted taxa containing members descended
from more than one ancestral line- Polyphyletic
34Phylogenetic trees
- Depict the genealogical relationship b/w taxa
- Tested with fossil records and structural and
molecular studies - Ideally every taxa is monophyletic- the members
of the taxon at whatever category should all be
descendents of a single common ancestral species - Natural Taxa
35Traditional Method Based on outward similarities
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38- Does the similarity of a particular feature
reflect inheritance from a common ancestor or
does it reflect adaptation to similar
environments?
39Homologous features
- Have a common origin
- But not necessarily a common function
- Foilage leaves, bud scales floral parts
modification of the leaf
40Analagous feature
- Have a common function but different evolutionary
origin - Structures area said to be analagous and are the
result of convergent evolution- selective forces
result in similar structures
41Spurge Family Euphorbiaceae
Fleshy, columnar stems, protective spines,
reduced leaves
42Catus family Cactaceae
43Milweed family Asclepiadaceae Hoodia
44The Cladistic method
- Cladistic or phylogenteic analysis- most widely
used method - Approach focuses on branching of one lineage to
another in the course of evolution - Attempts to identify monophyletic groups or
clades- defined by a possession of unique feature - Widespread feature- preexisting or ancestral
45- Outgroup- closely related taxa outside the one
being analyzed. - Cladogram- provides a graphical representation of
a working model of branching sequences.
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